President Donald Trump has ordered that the CIA begin to phase out its covert train-and-equip program in support of so-called "moderate" rebels fighting against the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.
The program represented the tip of the spear of a larger goal of regime change that had been the official policy of the United States since September 2013, when President Obama declared "Assad must go" in the aftermath of a chemical attack in the Damascus suburb of Ghouta that killed hundreds of civilians. Through this action, President Trump is walking away from an established policy of America taking an active role in forcing the Syrian President's ouster, willing instead to leave Assad's fate in the hands of the Syrian people and its allies. The decision by Trump to terminate support for the "moderate" Syrian rebels, while not giving voice to a policy that rejects regime change in Syria, is the clearest signal yet that the United States has changed course on trying to force regime change in Damascus as a precondition for a political settlement of the Syrian crisis.
The train and equip mission of the CIA in Syria can be traced back to the spring of 2011, when a revolution broke out in Libya against the dictatorial rule of Muammar Gadhafi. Backed by NATO airpower, anti-regime fighters were able to establish control over large areas inside Libya. The CIA began a program to train and equip these fighters, supplying weapons to Qatar and the United Arab Emirates, who in turn shipped these weapons to Libya, where they were turned over to Libyan rebels. (This circuitous route was chosen to avoid the U.S. being in violation of a UN embargo against weapons deliveries to Libya.)
Comment: The bias is evident here. Under the so called "dictatorial rule of Gadhafi" Libyans enjoyed one of the highest standards of living in the region.













Comment: Former Marine intelligence officer and UN Chief Weapons Inspector for Iraq, Scott Ritter weighs in on Syria, Russia & The White Helmets. See also: Petraeus organized billions of dollars' worth of illegal arms against Syria